The Nail

The Nail is published three times a year by Hammer and Tongue, who organise poetry slams in Brighton and Oxford. The next one in Oxford is at The Zodiac on Tuesday 2nd November and, if the contents of this magazine are anything to go by, it should be well worth a visit.

Concentrating mainly on contributed poetry, with a couple of well written book reviews and some interesting visual art thrown in, The Nail provides a nice variety of work by approximately twenty contributers to interest and stimulate the reader. From Haiku through to 50+ line writing, there is something for everyone here. My particular favourites cover the range.

Rapunzel Wizard is an environmental activist and performance poet and his 'Why I Had To Leave Brighton' had me roaring with laughter at the tale of a poet who liberally sprinkles his work with profanity (much to the delight of kids!). It all goes wrong for him, however, when faced by an over-zealous organiser with a swear box and a bunch of Guardian-reading dads whipped up into a frenzied lynch mob. The ultimate irony is that the performance he chronicles took place at Brighton Peace Fair: priceless.

There is a strong autumnal theme to this issue, and Linda Fisher’s haiku, below, catches the sense of this season perfectly:Along the bypassautumn trees drip leaves, like bloodfrom an open wound.

Similarly, Peter Wyton shows the rawness of autumn in Take A Leaf:When wind blows, shed clothes.Settle into the British winterBollock naked.

What is most pleasing about much of the work here is the use of poetry as a voice for protest and raising issues. Ellen McAteer (aka Elf) slaps our male dominated society hard with Patronised. Her righteous anger is all the more effective for the injection of humour and a willingness to play with words and perceptions:

You calling a novel chick-litCos it’s got a woman in it

And then canonising talesOf men who get drunk and go hunt whalesIF you’re gonna keep patronisingThen I’m gonna start MATRONISING!

A big cheer to Nina Davies for name-checking Superman and Monty Panesar in Encounters, Briefly (set in a railway station, naturally). Similar applause to Lizzy McHale for 'I like the word CUNT', handling the C word with deft good humour:

It kicks off countryand county and kinit’s the soil we stand onthe place we begin

There is much more to read and enjoy, and the art work is well worth a look too – respect to Sophia Blackwell for referencing Banksy in her drawing. So buy it and immerse yourself in other people’s creativity. Go to a slam. Enter the Daily Info Autumn Poetry Competition before it’s too late! The Nail has a lot to offer.